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Well they can because if you look at the movie of Star Wars the light sabers are made out of beams, and when a beam hits another beam it attracts like Neutrons do. So probably a really smart person can invent a lightsaber in the future.
As light passes through the earth's atmosphere turbulence and density variations slightly deflect its path in a random manner. The light of a star is such a tiny beam as it enters our eye that we perceive this random jiggling and brightness variations as "twinkling". The light of a planet, the moon, or the sun is a much bigger beam as it enters our eye and the random jiggling and brightness variations average out and we see no "twinkling".
By looking at the lines in a star's spectrum of light, astronomers can tell what kinds of elements the star is made of. This happens because when a beam of light hits an atom or molecule, that atom absorbs a characteristic wavelength (color) of visible light. Scientists have made a huge list of different elements and the different patterns of lines observed in theirj corresponding "spectra" (fancy word for light spectrums), and by using such lists can deduce precisely what each star is made of.
The red star is the coolest and the blue star is the hottest
No Partition Star is not free of charge it costs $29 at a minimum
You can do part-time jobs, movie shoots, commercials, plays, concerts, interviews, and photo shoots. All kind of things. :)
Beam me up Scotty!
Shooting star is a misnomer because it shoots through space but it's not a star, it's an asteroid. Meteor is'nt a misnomer.
a volcanic bomb is a shooting star kinda thing at it shoots into the sky and burns out
If the beam is directed towards Earth, then it's called a pulsar.
Either somebody shoots at the star. Or kills the star turning it into a supernova.
Legend has it that a star, or beam of light appeared on St. Dominic's forehead when he was baptized as an infant, however this meaning for the star is not well attested.
u dont
That is not possible, at least yet, except on Star Trek.
Pulsars are highly magnetized, rotating neutron stars that emit a beam of electromagnetic radiation with it's magnetic pole pointing towards Earth.So a pulsar is a neutron star, it's just we can observe the beam from Earth.
A comet is a rock that shoots around the galaxy, not sticking to any particular orbit. A star is a sun which planets revolve around, does not move anywhere.